A diverse group of public service workers joyfully celebrating in a modern German city park, symbolizing the positive change after 20 years of pay stagnation, with recognizable architectural elements of Germany in the background.

Public Service: Workers Hit Pay Stagnation After 20 Years

Historic Agreement: Public Service Wages Return to the ‘Zero Line’ After 20 Years

In a landmark collective agreement reached on 14 February 2026 in Potsdam, public sector employees covered by the TV-L agreement have, for the first time in two decades, reached the so-called Nulllinie. This means pay has been adjusted to offset inflation and protect real purchasing power. The deal affects roughly 925,000 employees working for the federal states and ends a long period of pay stagnation in nominal terms relative to price increases.

The agreement came after tough negotiations between the Tarifgemeinschaft deutscher Länder (TdL) and unions such as ver.di. While the result stops the erosion of wages caused by inflation, it falls short of the unions’ original demands. The settlement nonetheless aligns the Länder workforce more closely with colleagues covered by the TVöD (federal and municipal public service) in terms of timing and scale of increases.

What the Agreement Delivers: The Pay Increase Schedule

The negotiated package provides a total nominal wage increase of 5.8 percent, paid out in three steps over a period of 27 months. The staged increases are intended to be predictable and to restore real wages in light of recent inflation.

Effective DateIncreaseNotes
1 April 20262.8% (at least €100)First and largest step; aligns with TVöD second step timing for some groups
1 March 20272.0%Second tranche
1 January 20281.0%Final tranche; completes 5.8% over 27 months
Total5.8% over 27 monthsAffects ~925,000 TV-L employees

This schedule is designed to limit sudden shocks to public budgets while delivering measurable relief to employees. The first step includes a guaranteed minimum of €100, which particularly helps lower-paid workers.

Who Benefits and How: Groups and Structural Changes

The agreement covers a broad range of employees in the public sector of the German states: administrative staff, teachers, health workers, technical personnel, and others under TV-L. It also includes specific measures for trainees, student assistants, and shift workers.

Trainees and Student Assistants

Apprentices and trainees do not receive the full demanded minimum increase. Instead of the unions’ call for a €200 minimum uplift, trainees will receive a total of €150 more, paid in three steps. Student assistants will see their hourly rates raised to €15.20 for the summer semester of 2026 and to €15.90 in 2027, although they still do not have a separate TV-Stud contract as demanded by unions.

Shift Allowances, East-West Equalization and Clinics

Structural improvements were included beyond straight wage increases. Shift allowances were significantly raised (for example, increases from €40 to €100 were negotiated for certain allowances), measures to further align conditions between eastern and western states were agreed, and clinics can expect shorter weekly working times as part of negotiated working-time arrangements.

Reactions: Unions, Politicians and Critics

Union leaders framed the deal as a hard-won step that restores purchasing power after a long period of catch-up. ver.di chair Frank Werneke said negotiations were among the toughest in a long time and emphasized that the outcome puts state employees on a par with many TVöD colleagues.

Union Perspective

Unions welcomed the end of pay erosion and the concrete structural gains, while noting that the result did not fully meet their demands — notably the request for 7% plus a €300 minimum increase. Despite that, unions see the alignment with TVöD and the reinstatement of the Nulllinie as important achievements.

Political and Fiscal Concerns

Politicians and financial officials offered mixed reactions. Some warned about the long-term cost implications: a Hamburg finance senator cautioned that the full cost, including adjustments for civil servants and so-called “eternity effects” (ongoing pension and salary base impacts), could exceed €20 billion. At the same time, regional leaders such as NRW’s Minister President announced planned civil servant pay adjustments to mirror the settlement.

Broader Context and Implications

Reaching the Nulllinie after 20 years is symbolically important: it marks a reversal of real pay declines caused by inflation and long periods without sufficient wage catch-up. For many public sector workers, this means their salaries will better cover everyday costs and help stabilize household budgets.

At the same time, the deal highlights the tension between protecting wages and managing public finances. The phased approach balances immediate relief with fiscal planning, but it also sets a precedent that other public employers and sectors may follow. Several organizations in the TVöD area (federal/municipal) are already orienting their negotiations to similar increases.

What Employees Should Expect and Next Steps

Employees covered by TV-L should expect payroll adjustments on the specified effective dates. The first increase (2.8% with a €100 minimum) should appear in pay from 1 April 2026. Further increases will follow on 1 March 2027 and 1 January 2028. Trainees will receive phased allowances totalling €150 extra, and student assistants will see their hourly wages rise to €15.20 (summer 2026) and €15.90 (2027).

  1. 1 April 2026 — 2.8% increase (min €100)
  2. 1 March 2027 — 2.0% increase
  3. 1 January 2028 — 1.0% increase
  4. Trainees — €150 total increase in three steps
  5. Student assistants — €15.20 (Summer 2026), €15.90 (2027)

Organizations and payroll departments will need to update collective pay tables, align civil servant remuneration where applicable, and communicate changes clearly to staff. Employees with questions about their specific pay group or retroactive adjustments should consult their HR or payroll offices for exact implementation details.

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